Awoiska van der Molen makes her work at the periphery
of anonymous cities.
She mainly works in the darkness of the night, when her senses are not
being disturbed by the influences of the daily hectic urban environment.
While walking through the night her working field is divorced from this
ballast.

When van der Molen stands still to photograph, she has arrived at a place
which, to her, is entirely autonomous. Far from the madding crowd. Separated
in time and space for the duration of the exposure. A place that does
not need to become, a place that is. A place that is there already.

A place caught unaware by the photographer, who herself is only able to
stumble onto such places because she too is unprotected, solitary and
silent as ‘her’ places themselves.
In the images of Van der Molen, there is no doubt that we are getting
a direct look at the world. Yet, at the same time, the doubt, longing,
and quest of the photographer to be gone from this world are entering
into our view. Not a flight to an earlier, or a consciously chosen world
blindness, but an obstinate exercise in letting go, relating, and maintaining.
An absent presence, a present absence.